The relative capacity of Morris 7777 hepatomas and livers of tumor-bearing rats to take up and subsequently metabolize intravenously injected radiolabeled free fatty acids was investigated. The objective was to determine differences in lipid metabolism which may affect the lipid composition previously observed in this tumor. Both tissues demonstrated comparable selectivity in the uptake of palmitate, linoleate and arachidonate from blood, although the hepatoma took up one-tenth as much free fatty acid per g wet wt as liver. A much greater percentage of fatty acid taken up by the hepatoma was converted to aqueous soluble radioactivity, perhaps the result of oxidation. In the hepatoma, palmitate was incorporated into phospholipid molecular species in a pattern similar to that observed for diglyceride, which suggested that phospholipid synthesis occurred predominantly de novo. On the other hand, in liver, a large percentage of palmitate was incorporated into polyunsaturated phospholipid molecular species that were not present in the diglyceride pool, which suggested significant incorporation by the acylation of monoacyl phosphoglycerides. These studies indicate that the specificity for the uptake of fatty acids was not different in the two tissues; however, the subsequent metabolic processes are markedly different.
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